Originally published by the Voice of America (www.voanews.com).
Voice of America is funded by the US Federal Government and content it
exclusively produces is in the public domain.

China Pays Compensation, but Activists See No Reassessment of 1989
------------------------------------------------------------------
Tiananmen Crackdown
-------------------

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=120A891:3919ACA News of payment
surprised human rights advocates, since China has never allowed public
discussion of crackdown, much less given compensation - at least
publicly - for protesters who died An activist in southern China has
said authorities had paid compensation to the mother of a boy who died
at the hands of police as part of a violent 1989 crackdown on
pro-democracy demonstrators. The activist says it was the first
publicized case of the government offering any redress to a victim's
family. However, international human rights advocates say they do not
take the payment as a sign that the Communist authorities are ready to
reassess the crackdown.

News of the payment surprised human rights advocates, since China has
never allowed public discussion of the crackdown, much less given
compensation - at least publicly - for protesters who died on and
after June 4, 1989.

Nicholas Becquelin, a China researcher with the group Human Rights
Watch in Hong Kong, says the Chinese government does not appear ready
to revisit the events of 1989, which he says challenged the communist
leadership's legitimacy.

"It has tried very hard since 1989 to claim that it did not do
anything wrong; that they (leaders) were facing counterrevolutionary
troubles that had to be put down violently and that the same time
prevent any type of inquiry into what happened. So I think that the
government is still extremely sensitive about this, does not want to
reopen the issue and certainly does not want to acknowledge any kind
of guilt or fault," said Becquelin.

Tens of thousands of people, mostly young adults, took part in
pro-democracy protests across China in April and May of 1989. The
biggest demonstration went on for days in Beijing's Tiananmen Square,
until troops moved in on June 4 to clear the area. Some activists have
said hundreds, perhaps thousands, of protesters died in the ensuing
crackdown.

Huang Qi is an activist in the southern city of Chengdu, who announced
that local authorities paid about $8,700 hundred in "hardship
assistance" to Tang Deying. For 17 years, she had petitioned for
compensation after her 15-year-old son was beaten to death while in
police custody during the 1989 crackdown.

"The compensation given by the government this time is just an
individual case," said Huang. "It does not necessarily mean that the
government will reevaluate the June 4th incident."

Huang and others say the payment was the work of local officials who
used their individual discretion. It is not clear if the central
government approved.

Like Tang, relatives of many other victims have asked for restitution.
Authorities have repeatedly harassed and jailed a number of them for
merely voicing their appeals.

Advocates say that the Chengdu local government's decision to provide
restitution to Tang Deying is important even if does not signal an
overall change of attitude by the Beijing authorities on the Tiananmen
massacre.

With the number of civil disturbances growing throughout China, they
say it perhaps more significantly reflects that Chinese citizens are
taking matters into their own hands and increasingly pressing the
government for greater accountability.